Chinatown

6-10-11 The pretty view of Waikiki from my Mom and Clay's balcony at the Sheraton Princess

Friends:

Day 5 on Oahu was spent doing a variety of things. The men (Antonio and Clay) went to the Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor while the girls (Mom, Soleil, Eliana and I) took lessons in lei making and hula. We went to my mom’s hotel, The Sheraton Princess Kaiulani, and took our lessons there. Not only did we learn how to make orchid leis, we were also given our Hawaiian names. My Hawaiian name is “Mehealani,” which means “heavenly moonrise.” Eliana’s Hawaiian name is “Pualani,” which means “heavenly flower.” Soleil’s Hawaiian name is “Nalanani,” which means “beautiful sunshine.” Mom’s Hawaiian name is “Puanani,” which means “beautiful flower.”

6-10-11 Soleil, Eliana & I make orchid leis and receive our Hawaiian names

After our lei-making, we took an hour-long hula lesson from a tutu kumu (a grandmotherly teacher). It was quite a workout and we were all perspiring at the end of it!

6-10-11 Mom, Soleil, Eliana and I take an hour long hula lesson. What fun!

We worked up quite an appetite and it was time for lunch. So we headed to Puka Dog, a local hot dog stand located only on the islands Oahu and Kauai.

6-10-11 We fell in love with Puka Dog, a Hawaiian tropical hot dog. Ono!

“Puka” means “hole” in Hawaiian. A puka dog, is a bun with a hole inside. The sausage is inserted with a variety of tropical relishes and condiments. I had a lilikoi (passion fruit) mustard and pineapple relish Puka Dog. They were soooo good. Clay, my stepdad, loves them so much that he wants to open a Puka Dog franchise in New Orleans!

6-10-11 Soleil holds her tasty Puka Dog

Puka Dog is also renowned for their Hawaiian shave ice. There is no “d” at the end of “shave,” in case you are thinking I misspelled the word. Shave ice is a powdery fine crushed ice flavored with different kinds of tropical syrups. It is akin to the “snowball” of New Orleans although I have to say that the Hawaiian shave ice has a much finer texture. Just delicious!

6-10-11 A Blue Hawaiian Shave Ice from Puka Dog

After eating our Puka dogs, the girls decided to do some shopping at a nearby outdoor market. We found lots great bargains that rivaled the prices in Chinatown. Imagine that, in the heart of Waikiki!

6-10-11 The girls shop at an outdoor market and find Hawaiian bargains!

We met up with the guys again and headed to Chinatown for our second visit, this time on our own. We shopped for leis, souvenirs, and ate at the food court full of Chinese, Singaporean, and Filipino foods. Eliana and Soleil had traditional Filipino halo-halo, for the first time. Halo-halo is a shaved ice dessert with coconut milk, milk, ice cream, and tropical fruits, a great summertime treat!

6-10-11 Kid Chef Eliana with Filipino halo-halo!

I had my favorite pork hash with a “paper” cupcake dessert, an angel food cake-like pastry. Can you believe that the pork hash was only 50 cents each?!

6-10-11 I ate pork hash and a paper cupcake from Chinatown. I LOVE pork hash!

After our fill of food, we headed back to Mom and Clay’s hotel, the Sheraton Princess Kaiulanai, and watched a hula show as we sipped on tropical cocktails.

6-10-11 We watch a lovely hula dancer at the Sheraton Princess Kaiulani

The night ended with a stroll through a big Hula street festival in front of Waikiki beach.

Until next time…

Warmly, Dianne

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Dianne’s Summer Travels – August 2008

by admin on August 29, 2008

Friends:

I spent a week in San Francisco and Berkeley, California. I presented two storytelling concerts and two professional development sessions at the International Association of School Librarianship Conference in Berkeley. I met librarians from all over the globe – the United States, Japan, Korea, China, Sweden, Germany, Australia, Austria, India, New Zealand, Canada, Jamaica, and so many other countries. I even received a gift of vegemite to go! It was such a wonderful conference – I was truly inspired by my new international friends. Thank you so much, IASL librarians! A special thank you to Blanche Woolls and Kristin Fontichiaro.

This is a picture of librarians doing a story theater exercise in my Story Fest workshop.

IASL 2008 - Story Fest Workshop

IASL 2008 - Story Fest Workshop

Here is a picture of me with sweet librarians from the U.S., Japan and China.

IASL 2008 - Dianne and International Librarians

IASL 2008 - Dianne and International Librarians

This is a picture of one of the librarians performing Kamishibai Story Theater. The story is a Japanese folktale called “The Mouse’s Wedding.”

IASL 2008 - Kamishibai Story Theater Workshop

IASL 2008 - Kamishibai Story Theater Workshop

Prior to the IASL conference, my husband, Antonio, joined me for nearly a week in San Francisco. We stayed at the luxurious Harbor Court Hotel on the Embarcadero. We toured Napa wine country and brought back eight bottles of wine! Woo hoo! We wined and dined our way through San Francisco, eating the most delicious cuisine and sampling the region’s best wines.

San Francisco 2008 - Champagne Tasting at Chandon Domaine, Napa Wine Country

San Francisco 2008 - Champagne Tasting at Domaine Chandon, Napa Wine Country

Although I have visited San Francisco before, it has been quite some time since I toured the city and I fell in love with her all over again. The undulating hills make the city scenic and adventurous. Antonio and I saw most of the San Francisco must-sees: the weekend Ferry Plaza Farmer’s Market at the Ferry Building on the Embarcadero, Chinatown, Lombard Street (we drove down the world’s “crookedest” street), Pier 39 (including the seals that have taken over the boat slips), Fisherman’s Wharf, the Cliff House overlooking the Pacific Ocean, the Golden Gate Bridge (we drove over it and took pictures from a vista point), the cable cars (Antonio hung off the side – talk about cold!), Alcatraz (we viewed it from a distance on a very clear day), and the rolling fog!

Here is the Golden Gate Bridge. The actual color of the bridge is called “International Orange.” It was supposed to be a primer but it was so beautiful that the city decided to keep the bridge that color.

San Francisco 2008 - The Golden Gate Bridge

San Francisco 2008 - The Golden Gate Bridge

This is one of the famous buildings in Chinatown, on the corner of California and Grant, where you can catch the renowned cable car.

San Francisco 2008 - Chinatown, California & Grant Streets

San Francisco 2008 - Chinatown, California & Grant Streets

Check out the cakes at this Chinatown Bakery. Wow!

San Francisco 2008 - Chinatown Cakes

San Francisco 2008 - Chinatown Cakes

While in Chinatown, we ate lunch at a very nice restaurant called The Oriental Pearl. The food was delicious. It was also on must-eat list because Rachael Ray (Eliana and I are big fans) ate there for $40/day. So I took this picture just for Eliana.

San francisco 2008 - Dianne at the Oriental Pearl

San francisco 2008 - Dianne at the Oriental Pearl

Antonio and I both had must-eats on our list – I wanted a slice of sourdough pizza and he wanted an authentic Mission burrito. We took the BART and ventured into the Mission district to find the BIGGEST burrito on the planet at Farolito’s, a hole-in-the-wall place that everyone recommended. I found my sourdough pizza at Fisherman’s Wharf at The Franciscan Restaurant’s walk-up window. We did find out that even in August, San Francisco can be quite chilly. We both brought home new jackets. LOL

Here I am at Pier 39. Check out the beautiful city line behind me.

San Francisco 2008 - Dianne at Pier 39

San Francisco 2008 - Dianne at Pier 39

This is the gorgeous Pacific Ocean, viewed from the historic Cliff House.

San Francisco 2008 - The Pacific Ocean at the Cliff House

San Francisco 2008 - The Pacific Ocean at the Cliff House

I can’t forget to show you the famous Cable Car. It’s fun to ride but you better bring a jacket because it can be chilly with the wind whipping around you.

San Francisco 2008 - The Famous Cable Car

San Francisco 2008 - The Famous Cable Car

This is a view of Lombard Street from our rental car – we’re driving doooooown. You have to ride the brakes and go very slooooowly.

San Francisco 2008 - Driving Down Lombard

San Francisco 2008 - Driving Down Lombard

San Francisco is definitely in my Top 5 U.S. cities. It’s a city for couples, friends, families, and singles. Thank goodness we didn’t experience any earthquakes while we were there (a 5.4 hit the L.A. area just the week before). But I was definitely shaken and taken by the city’s beauty.

Though we didn’t spend a lot of time in Berkeley, we did tour the Scharffen Berger Chocolate Factory (it’s free). That was AMAZING and the chocolate is superb (satisfying the chocoholic in me…). Scharffen Berger (now a division of Hershey’s Artisan Chocolates) is a gourmet chocolate maker in every sense of the phrase. They pay above fair trade prices for their cacao beans and create the chocolate from beginning to end – from roasting the beans to hand-packaging the bars. If you love chocolate, you must try Scharffen Berger. Here I am being goofy, getting ready to tour the factory. The cover on my chin is for “beards.”

San Francisco 2008 - Touring Sharffenberger

San Francisco 2008 - Dianne Touring Scharffen Berger Chocolate Factory and Being Silly

Antonio and I also dined at Alice Waters’ Chez Panisse in the “Gourmet Ghetto” area of Berkeley. Alice Waters has, for over 25 years, served finely and simply prepared organic in-season food from sustainable agriculture farms no further away than 100 miles from the restaurant. The menu changes daily. Chez Panisse restaurant was named Best Restaurant in America by Gourmet magazine in 2001.

San Francisco 2008 - Chez Panisse Restaurant, Berkeley

San Francisco 2008 - Chez Panisse Restaurant, Berkeley

Visit the Bay Area – you’ll love the city but be sure to bring a warm jacket!

San Francisco 2008 - Keeping Warm by the Toy Car

San Francisco 2008 - Keeping Warm by the Toy Car

Warmly, Dianne

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